Friday, August 5, 2022 CapitalPress.com 11 Poultry: No chickens will be slaughtered on site Continued from Page 1 community of Jordan and another between the cities of Stayton and Aumsville — are still in the pro- cess of obtaining permits. Eric Simon, a longtime poul- try farmer from Brownsville, Ore., will own and manage J-S Ranch. He said newer facilities are equipped with modern tech- nology and state-of-the-art ven- tilation systems that minimize impacts like odor, while provid- ing the perfect environment for chickens. Barns are cleaned and disin- fected between each flock, and manure is sold as nutrient-rich fertilizer. “Frankly, we’ve been operat- ing these businesses for 30 years out here, and we haven’t done harm to the area,” Simon said. “So the proof is out there.” Continued from Page 11 George Plaven/Capital Press Eric Simon, a longtime chick- en farmer, will operate the J-S Ranch near Scio, Ore. He and others in the poultry indus- try say new technology for the farms is tailored for ani- mal welfare, while controlling odor. Simon is pictured here at Hiday Poultry Farms LLC in Brownsville. Three farms It has taken Simon nearly two years from when he bought the property in 2020 to receive his permit for a confined animal feeding operation, or CAFO, for J-S Ranch. The permit was issued May 26 by the Oregon Department of Agriculture and Department of Environmental Quality, which jointly manage the state’s CAFO program. J-S Ranch will include 11 barns, each measuring 39,120 square feet, where Simon will raise six flocks of up to 580,000 chickens per year, totaling 3.48 million birds. No chickens will be slaugh- tered on site. Instead, they will be sent to Foster Farms’ processing plant in Kelso, Wash. Farmers Against Foster Farms, along with seven other groups that oppose the project, peti- tioned ODA and DEQ in June to reconsider the permit, saying it does not do enough to protect water and wells from possible contamination. The agencies denied the peti- tioners’ request for a temporary stay, finding they did not show they would suffer irreparable harm. Simon said he has not yet bro- ken ground, but hopes to later this summer. Meanwhile, the owners of the two other proposed large-scale chicken farms are still seeking permits. Jason Peters submitted a CAFO application for Evergreen Ranch on May 22, which would allow him to construct 16 barns each measuring 60-by-600 feet. Here, he would raise six flocks of up to 750,000 chickens annually, or 4.5 million birds. Evergreen Ranch would be near Thomas Creek, roughly 8 miles east of Scio and within a half-mile of the Lourdes Public Charter School in Jordan. Meanwhile, Hiday Poultry Farms LLC has purchased an 86-acre property between Stayton and Aumsville in Marion County. The other two farms are in Linn County. Owner Randy Hiday currently raises 530,000 chickens per flock for Foster Farms in the Browns- ville area, 40 miles to the south. Neighbors concerned Teresa Clausen, a neighbor whose home is across a small irri- gation ditch from where Hiday plans to expand, said she first learned about the proposal in 2019. At the time, Clausen was working at a store where she met a man who was a land scout for Foster Farms. He told her about the company’s plans, which Clau- sen said came as a shock. “I was fighting back tears, and my adrenaline was rushing,” she said. “Now slowly, over the last two years, all of it is coming to fruition.” Until then, Clausen said she had no idea the region was being considered for more large chicken farms. She contacted Kendra Kimbirauskas, a small- scale rancher in Scio, to learn more about the proposals. While Clausen said she believes in the right to farm, she worries such a large operation next door might contaminate her home’s well and foul the air with poultry dust and ammonia. “It will affect the community,” she believes. “Not just the people who live in proximity to it, but the entirety of it.” Kimbirauskas is one of the core organizers of Farmers Against Foster Farms, and has 20 years of experience advocating for sustainable agriculture and food systems. “Neither our land use laws, nor our water laws, nor our air Ruling: Farmers have technology agreements with biotech companies George Plaven/Capital Press Baby chicks in a barn at Hiday Poultry Farms LLC in Brownsville, Ore. The operation raises 530,000 broiler chickens per flock for Foster Farms. George Plaven/Capital Press Linda Duman is the administrator for Lourdes Public Charter School in Jordan, Ore., near the proposed Evergreen Ranch site that would raise approximately 4.5 million broiler chickens an- nually for Foster Farms. Duman said she is concerned about how the operation will affect air and water quality in the community. laws are currently at a level that’s effective at mitigating (these) impacts,” she said. “I think Ore- gon is about 15 to 20 years behind the rest of the country, in the sense of how industrial ani- mal agriculture has expanded.” Water quality A major point of conten- tion is how the chicken farms might impact surface water and groundwater. Opponents have argued the local water table rises above sur- face level during the rainy win- ter months, increasing the likeli- hood that pollutants from chicken manure could seep underground or wash into creeks and rivers. “This place is just too wet in the winter,” Eastman said. “The water will come straight up, and all that bird feces, ammonia and urine is going to be pulled right down into the ground.” However, Bill Mattos, pres- ident of the Northwest Chicken Council, said farms are built and managed in such a way to prevent that from happening. “There’s never been a dis- charge of poultry product into a stream in Oregon. It’s just never happened,” Mattos said. Chicken barns do not have concrete floors, but instead have compacted soil topped with 6-8 inches of dry wood shavings. Used litter is stored in separate facilities that do have a concrete floor, and is kept only until it can be sold for fertilizer. “The idea that the manure is going to lie around, it’s just not going to happen,” Mattos said. “It’s gone as soon as they can get it shipped.” As added conditions of the per- mit issued to J-S Ranch, Simon must complete a ground compac- tion study before any chickens arrive and monitor each of two static wells to ensure groundwa- ter remains at least 2 feet below the floors. Still, some residents say they are not reassured. Linda Duman, administra- tor of the Lourdes Public Char- ter School in Jordan, worries the potential of airborne ammo- nia and increased groundwater nitrates from the proposed Ever- green Ranch could cause health problems in her students. The school enrolls up to 49 kids, grades K-8. “It really hits children and older people,” Duman said. “I would think we put some com- mon sense and critical thinking into this.” Need for expansion Expansion is already under- way at Hiday Poultry Farms’ Nye Road Ranch in Brownsville, a densely agricultural area sur- rounded by grass seed fields, hazelnut trees and sheep ranches. Randy Hiday began raising chickens nearly 30 years ago, starting out at two small farms in neighboring Lane County. He bought the operation from Fos- ter Farms in 2005, starting with eight barns and building five more. Now, seven additional barns are under construction as Hiday said the need for expansion has grown. “When I started, we had about 105 to 110 farms in the North- west. We have 26 left,” he said. “I know we’re 5 million birds short, probably, of where we need to be.” According to the Northwest Chicken Council, Oregon has 26 growers with 151 barns totaling 3.17 million square feet, raising more than 25 million chickens per year. All of that production is in the Willamette Valley. Rich Reid, live production manager for Foster Farms based in Aurora, Ore., estimated the company has lost 500,000 square feet of barn space in the last five years to grower retirements, and expects to lose 1.2 million square feet in the next five years. ”All of that growing space we’re trying to replace to con- tinue to be sustainable,” Reid said. Mattos said Americans eat more chicken than any other protein, and local production is needed to satisfy increasing demand. Inside the barns During a tour of one of the Hiday barns near Browns- ville, Mattos and representa- tives of Foster Farms showed how automated technology cre- ates an ideal indoor environment for thousands of baby chicks. They all donned Tyvek suits for biosecurity. ”This is what keeps the birds happy,” Reid said, pointing to a control panel that continuously monitors temperature, humidity and ammonia levels that meet American Humane Farm Pro- gram guidelines. “This is the brain.” According to a publication from the University of Georgia Cooperative Extension, though smells associated with any type of livestock farm are inevitable, advancements in ventilation and drinking systems help keep poul- try barns dry, which in turn helps to control odor. “Properly operated poultry houses emit minimal odor,” the publication states. “In fact, it is not unusual to approach a mod- ern, well managed poultry house without experiencing any or only minimal odors. The drier condi- tions in the houses also ensure lit- tle or no fly production associated with growing chickens.” Air from inside these barns is circulated to keep chickens cool, and emitted from exhaust fans. The exhaust extends about 50 feet before it is dispersed into the atmosphere. The publication, written by Dan Cunningham, the univer- sity’s extension coordinator for poultry science, recommends providing “reasonable” setbacks from property lines and dwell- ings to ensure neighbors are not adversely impacted. Both Hiday and Simon said they have never received com- plaints about their farms from neighbors. Jason Gentemann, Pacific Northwest Division manager for Foster Farms, said the mod- ern facilities adopted by Hiday and Simon are evidence of their commitment to animal welfare, while simultaneously minimizing impacts such as odor. ”Somebody’s gotta grow chickens to be able to feed peo- ple in the state of Oregon,” Gen- temann said. “They do it the right way.” Working group The issue has garnered atten- tion from the Oregon Senate, which has convened a working group to further examine the impact of large poultry farms. Sen. Michael Dembrow, a Portland-area Democrat, is leading the 21-member group, which includes members from Farmers Against Foster Farms and other environmen- tal groups, industry represen- tatives and staff members from ODA, DEQ, the Oregon Water Resources Department and Department of Land Conserva- tion and Development. The group met twice in July, and will meet again Aug. 12 and 31 and Sept. 15. Dembrow said it is still too early to tell what — if any — proposals may be brought back to the full Senate Committee on Natural Resources and Wild- fire Recovery. Kimbirauskas, with Farm- ers Against Foster Farms, said the group needs to examine Ore- gon’s land use laws to determine whether massive chicken barns should be allowed on high-value farmland, and whether Oregon’s CAFO program should regulate air quality in addition to water quality. She said the farms also take advantage of the state’s live- stock watering exemption, which exempts livestock from water rights permits without restriction. “We’re really trying to make our rural area a place where peo- ple want to live and have a vibrant life,” she said, “and not just have it be a sacrificed zone for these corporations to take our wealth and send it elsewhere.” What is happening now may be just the tip of the iceberg, Kim- birauskas said. Foster Farms was acquired in June by Atlas Hold- ings, a Connecticut-based invest- ment firm, for an undisclosed amount. “One thing we do know is that companies don’t acquire other companies to maintain the status quo,” she said. Depending on the work group’s findings, Dembrow said it is possible the state will need to come up with a new strategy to mitigate the impact of poultry farms. “I think there’s concern,” he said. “(Opponents) are really focused on Oregon not becom- ing such a ‘chickenville.’ I sym- pathize with that. If that’s what we’re facing, that is problematic.” the chain of events,” thereby directly and immediately causing the injury, the 8th Circuit said. Unlike meth cooks, who are “totally independent” from pharma- ceutical companies, farmers have technology agreements with biotech companies and are licensed to use genetically engineered seeds, the ruling said. Due to these “direct relation- ships,” the biotech seed manufac- turer exercises “some degree of con- trol over their acts,” according to the 8th Circuit. Cold medicine doesn’t have to be misused to be effective, while the “primary benefit” of the biotech seed is its ability to withstand her- bicide applications, the ruling said. “Consumers could not receive that benefit without misusing dicamba.” Crops that are genetically engi- neered to resist herbicides have a contentious history in the farm industry. Though GE seeds are mostly planted in the Midwest, controver- sies have erupted in the Northwest as well. Commercialization of alfalfa and sugar beets resistant to glypho- sate herbicides resulted in years of litigation. The discovery of unauthorized glyphosate-resistant wheat disrupted overseas export markets, while gly- phosate-resistant grass seed escaped from field trials to became a weed problem. Glyphosate has become less effective against some weeds over time, which compelled Monsanto and BASF to develop seeds resistant to dicamba herbicides. That way, weeds that survive glyphosate will still be killed by dicamba. Under a legal settlement over dicamba-resistant seeds between the two companies, BASF gave up its intellectual property rights in exchange for acreage-based pay- ments from Monsanto. Dicamba-resistant cotton and soybeans were approved by the USDA before federal regulators authorized new less-volatile for- mulations of dicamba that aren’t as prone to drift. When Monsanto commercialized the GE seeds, “off-label dicamba use exploded” in 2015 and 2016 because farmers used older formulations of the herbicide, the 8th Circuit said. In this case, it’s unknown who manufactured the dicamba that harmed Bill Bader, the Missouri peach farmer who sued the compa- nies, but the actual “injury-produc- ing agent” is the GE seed sold by Monsanto, the ruling said. Without the commercialization of that product, farmers wouldn’t have sprayed the older dicamba for- mulations, the ruling said. The jury awarded Bader $15 mil- lion for damage to his peach trees as well as $250 million in puni- tive damages against Monsanto and BASF, but a judge reduced the puni- tive damages to $60 million. The 8th Circuit has now ordered a new jury trial over punitive dam- ages for Monsanto and BASF, since the companies didn’t have equal control over GE seed sales. Even so, the jury’s previous deter- mination regarding liability will be allowed to stand under the 8th Cir- cuit’s ruling, which is the aspect that most worries the seed and pesticide industries. The American Seed Trade Asso- ciation and Croplife America, which represent those industries, urged the 8th Circuit not to hold agribusiness companies liable for other people’s law-breaking actions. “Factoring in how a product can be misused by third parties, if that is even possible, will only add con- siderable time and cost to an already lengthy and costly process,” the groups said in a court brief. “That threat of liability, in turn, will only discourage further invest- ment and innovation in two distinct areas — seed and herbicide products — which are critical to American agriculture,” they said. Several environmental groups, on the other hand, said the lawsuit is an example of why “herbicide-re- sistant crop systems are unsustain- able,” since they continuously lead to new herbicide-resistant weeds and more chemical use. “This damaging system offers no real public benefit, only externalized costs borne by other farmers and the environment,” the environmental groups said. “The manufacturers and regulators have both utterly failed to protect farmers from these foresee- able, indeed, known dangers.”